Ruud Janssen
This article is an autobiography or has been extensively edited by the subject or by someone connected to the subject. (February 2019) |
Ruud Janssen (born 29 July 1959 in Tilburg) is a Dutch Fluxus and mail artist currently living in Breda in the Netherlands.
Life[]
Ruud Janssen studied Physics and Mathematics. He became active with mail art in 1980 and did several international mail art projects. From 1994 till 2001 he has conducted interviews with Fluxus and mail artists in different communication forms; the results have been published in booklets and on the internet since 1996. In later years he focused more on acrylic painting and individual correspondences.
Work[]
Janssen publishes articles, magazines and booklets with his TAM-Publications and participates in international mail art projects, collaborations and exhibitions. He founded IUOMA (International Union of Mail-Artists) in 1988 and is also the curator of the TAM-Rubberstamp Archive, the result of a Mail Art collection that has been accumulated by him from 1983 till now. The archive[1] contains prints, original rubberstamps, magazines and literature. It is the longest time a mail art project has run ever.[citation needed]
In 2003 Litsa Spathi founded together with Ruud Janssen the Fluxus Heidelberg Center for which they are building up a collection of Fluxus material and where they also publish their own works.[citation needed]
Janssen was selected to publish an essay as one of eleven contemporary "New Fluxus" artists who are seen to 'inhabit the site of Fluxus, developing and interpreting the Fluxus tradition in a new way.' in a special double issue of the journal Visible Language on Fluxus.
In 1994, Janssen[2] began a series of mail-interviews, the body of which are now recognized[by whom?] as an influential contribution in the field of mail art. He interviewed Fluxus[3] and mail art personalities by using all the communication-forms that were available (fax, e-mail, envelope, personal meeting, telephone). The question traveled by one form and the answer could be sent back in another form. This concept resulted in a series of mail-interviews. These interviews were published in booklet-form and the complete texts are also available online.[4] In 2008, a selection of the mail-interviews were published in book form.[5]
In 1997 Janssen had a solo exhibition of his mail art work and interviews in Guy Bleus' E-Mail Art Archives (Provincial Center for Visual Arts, now Z33) in Hasselt, Belgium.[6][7]
Publications[]
- Janssen, Ruud (1998), The E-mail Interview with Guy Bleus, New York: Ragged Edge Press
- Janssen, Ruud (2007), 25 Years in Mail-Art, Breda: TAM-Publications
- Spathi, Litsa (2008), Performances Fluxus Heidelberg 2003-2005, Breda / Heidelberg: Fluxus Heidelberg Center
- Janssen, Ruud (2009), Mail-Interviews Part 1-5, Breda: TAM-Publications
- Janssen, Ruud (2009), Mail-Art Statements Collection, Breda: TAM-Publications
References[]
- ^ "Ruud Janssen". 2007-10-11.
- ^ "Ruud Janssen, About Me". TAM & IUOMA - Ruud Janssen. TAM & IUOMA - Ruud Janssen. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
- ^ "LIST OF PUBLICATIONS BY FLUXUS HEIDELBERG CENTER". Fluxus Heidelberg Center. Fluxus Heidelberg Center. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
- ^ "The MAIL-INTERVIEW PROJECT". TAM / IUOMA. TAM / IUOMA. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
- ^ "Books from Ruud Janssen". Mail Interviews by Ruud Janssen. Ruud Janssen. 11 April 2008. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
- ^ Ruud Janssen (NL), in: Cultuurnieuws - Provinciaal Centrum voor Beeldende Kunsten, Hasselt, Belgium, December 1997, Volume 2, #7.
- ^ Pêle-Mêle. Guy Bleus – 42.292, ed. R. Geladé, N. Coninx & F. Bleus, Cultuurcentrum, Hasselt, 2010.
External links[]
- 1959 births
- Living people
- Fluxus
- Dutch bloggers
- People from Tilburg